MAPS, DIRECTIONS & PARKING

BOX OFFICE & WILL CALL

Visit our box office in the lobby of the Helen Bonfils Theatre Complex, across from Boettcher Concert Hall in the Denver Performing Arts Complex. Ticket agents also are available in person at each theatre one hour prior to each show.

No one has mentored more of this generation’s greatest playwrights than Indecent‘s Paula Vogel

Paula Vogel — acclaimed writer of the DCPA Theatre Company’s season-opening Indecent, the Pulitzer Prize-winning and Broadway-bound How I Learned to Drive, and the Obie-winning The Baltimore Waltz — has an almost mystical status among this country’s playwrights as a teacher and mentor. In fact, it’s hard to come up with a leading contemporary playwright she hasn’t nurtured over the years in her classes at Brown University and the Yale School of Drama.

Sarah Ruhl

Sarah Ruhl, whose play The Clean House played at the Denver Center in the 2005-06 season, likens Vogel’s teaching to telepathy: “She looks into your soul and she says, ‘These are the next 10 books you need to read, here are the next four plays you need to read, now go write 10 more pages. She won’t tell you how to edit your play. She won’t tell you where your play needs to go. But she’ll look at you with this piercing gaze and ask the most perceptive question that you had no idea needed to be asked.”

Here’s how Vogel herself describes her teaching approach: “I don’t think prescribing anything is helpful. I don’t think trying to change someone’s voice is helpful. I’ve had a very easy philosophy, which is just find incredible original voices that are all different from each other, and hope that they will come to work with me and influence each other and double-dare each other. I think of playwriting more as a poker game than as a solitary act. So I think that when you’re in a room filled with extraordinary minds and thinkers who are trying new things, the worst thing to say is, ‘No,’ or, ‘That’s not a play.’ Or, ‘You should be doing it this way.’

‘I basically just say, ‘Show me. Show me, teach me, try it,’ and then I just try to provoke people. I double-dare you.’ — Paula Vogel, playwright and teacher

Plays: In the Heights (Broadway Series: 2010); Elliot, A Soldier’s Fugue; Water By the Spoonful

Awards: Pulitzer Prize for Water by the Spoonful, Tony for In the Heights, Pulitzer finalist

More about Paula Vogel: Playwright Paula Vogel, 68, is longtime teacher who spent from 1984 to 2008 at Brown University, where she served as Adele Kellenberg Seaver Professor in Creative Writing, oversaw its playwriting program, and helped found the Brown/Trinity Rep Consortium. From 2008 to 2012, Vogel was Eugene O’Neill Professor of Playwriting and department chair at the Yale School of Drama, as well as playwright in residence at the Yale Repertory Theatre. Her plays include Indecent (winner of two Tony Awards), How I Learned to Drive, A Civil War Christmas, The Long Christmas Ride Home, The Mineola Twins, Hot ‘N’ Throbbin, The Baltimore Waltz, Desdemona, And Baby Makes Seven and The Oldest Profession. She contributed to Curious Theatre’s The War Anthology in 2006.

About the author: Douglas Langworthy is the DCPA Theatre Company’s Director of New Play Development, Prior to Denver, he served as Dramaturg and Director of Play Development at McCarter Theatre in Princeton, N.J. for two years and Director of Literary Development and Dramaturgy at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival for seven.